Essay On The Movie Sinister

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“Frailty, thy name is woman!”
Domineering. Overbearing. Controlling. The last qualities thought of within the mother figure. Sinister it is as the enigma between the mother, the lover and the daughter, are confronting both mentally and sexually. Provoking the audience subconsciously, this psychoanalytical phenomenon can be further appreciated through a combination of feminist and psychoanalytical theory. Through which we are able to pull apart the pivotal role of the “mother”, most famously in the cinematography of Alfred Hitchcock. Here, he contemplates the notions of the idealistic mother and indigent memories by manifesting compelling maternal figures. Not only as maternal, but also as a lover or a daughter, these roles become mother surrogates, …show more content…

The film studies the duality of human nature, and discusses the depravity and immorality of the 1950s. Feminist film critics often argue it to be a “prototypical on extreme violent assaults on women.” Psycho places prominence on the devouring nature of Norma Bates and her influence on her son as both an individual and lover. It can be argued that Norman would not be the criminal he is without the controlling methods of his mother. Through Norman’s impersonations “go tell her she’ll not be appeasing her ugly appetite with my food… or my son” allows we as an audience to form a judgment about the character of Mrs. Bates. Through the repetition of “my” we are able to observe her possessive nature and verbal maltreats towards Norman. Despite Norman killing her off ten years ago, Norma Bates has an enormous impact on his life. Although the mother is not present in the film, the symbolic role of the “absent” mother is more powerful, as it continually reminds us of the maternal dominance of an adult’s infantile unconscious. In Psycho Hitchcock passes over the fine line between neurosis from psychosis to reveal the protagonist’s utter dominance by the hallucinating illusions of the ‘oedipal

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